Funky Sole 11th Year Anniversary

I promote a bunch of East Coast Funk and Soul and music events on these pages, but I need to give a shout to the left coast. I have been a fan of this series of different music nights for a long time. When it was the Root Down, I would try and get my friends in LA to send me the promo flyers because they were so dope. I know I have a few around somewhere. Funky Sole has definitely evolved in the past eleven years. They have had a who’s who of guests at all incarnations of the party (Keb Darge, J-Rocc, Adrian Younge, DJ Nu-Mark, Quantic, Chairman Mao, DJ Shadow, Skeme Richards(among others) and official DJs Clifton, Music Man Miles, DJ Chico, the gang of DJs known as the Soul Travelers, a rotating cast of LA DJs, and unofficial residents Cut Chemist and Egon who have blessed the turntables while opening people’s minds to all kinds of new, funky music from all over the world. Not commercial music. Not radio music. REAL MUSIC. The best part about it? It’s free, every week, and right smack in the middle of all the action.

“It wasn’t like Cut Chemist playing hits, or Egon playing hits, we were experimenting with different types of stuff. It wasn’t just Deep Funk, it was Ethiopian Soul, Psychedelic, Ghanaian, Salsa, Cumbia, Funk, Old School Hip Hop and obscure Cosmic Disco, twisted, dusted, psychedelia. Whatever we wanted to play. ”

I definitely wanted to shout out Miles and the Funky Sole crew, as they have been doing parties the way they should be done since day one. They do it and do it well. If you are out in LA and haven’t been to this party, I urge you to get there and get turned on to a whole different vibe. Miles describes the party itself as “A dance party where we celebrate mostly 60′s to early 70′s Funk Soul music, whether it’s instrumental or vocal. If it’s funky and it moves people on the dance floor, that’s what works at Funky Sole. And vinyl.” Sounds like my kind of place. Hit ‘em up when you’re in the LA area.

Funky Sole
Every Saturday
The Echo
1822 Sunset Blvd
LA, CA

Weekly Special Guests and Surprises

Funky Sole 11th Year Anniversary video directed and edited by Giovanni Solis

Keep Diggin’!

Follow Funky Soul on twitter.

Eula Cooper Live! in Brooklyn


Dope flyer by Soulmarcosa

For all you Funk and Soulsters in the Tri-State area, the good people over at Dig Deeper have got another hot show for you. In the past, they have brought you artists like Syl Johnson, Winfield Parker, Sugar Pie DeSanto, Willie West, Kings Go Forth, Marva Whitney, Darrow Fletcher and more. On January 28th they bring back Soul Sister Eula Cooper for the second time since 2008. Eula Cooper, known for her small string of sides released on Tragar and Note Records, as well as Atlantic, will be bringing her Georgia heat to the stage at Southpaw, backed up by The MAP Legends. Meah Pace will be the opener, and as usual, Mr. Robinson and DJ Honky will be spinning the Funk and Soul 45′s in between acts and late into the night.

Dig Deeper does a great job bringing these sometimes long forgotten Funk and Soul artists to NYC, many who have never performed here during their early careers. Their events have grown pretty huge, getting spotlighted in magazines like The New Yorker, and drawing audiences from pretty far. So if you’re in the market for some real, live, Funk and Soul, Dig Deeper have got your fix this weekend.

Dig Deeper
Southpaw
125 5th Ave
Brooklyn, NY
2,3 to Bergen/ B, Q to 7th
718.230.0236

Buy tickets to this event here.

Keep Diggin’!

Eula Cooper Live! at The 5 Spot in Brooklyn, NY 2008

Turntable Duo: Otomo Yoshihide + Christian Marclay


Photo by Peter Kraut. Courtesy Paula Cooper Gallery, New York

As always, interesting stuff comes down the pipe here at FMF, and this by far has been one of the most interesting things that I’ve come across in a while. It’s in NYC, so all of you New York City turntablist heads who have an open mind (and those who just have an open mind), this one’s for you:

“Two experimental music giants, Otomo Yoshihide and Christian Marclay, perform together in New York for the first time in over a decade. Marclay, one of the world’s leading artists and winner of the 54th Venice Biennale Golden Lion Award, pushed the boundaries of musical creation when he pioneered the use of the turntable as a musical instrument. Otomo, electroacoustic improvisation musician and free jazz guitarist, earned an international reputation as a central figure in Japan’s avant-garde music scene. Together, these unconventional “turntablists” will again push to the extreme what is possible with turntables and records.

More on the artists and moderator:

Otomo Yoshihide boasts a groundbreaking résumé. The Japanese native has spent the past thirty years stretching the limits of free jazz, improvisation and noise music with an array of approaches and styles. Otomo has released dozens of experimental recordings, including a full-length album collaboration with Marclay, Moving Parts, in 2000. Most recently, Otomo Yoshihide collaborated with the Japanese poet Ryoichi Wago and musician/activist Michiro Endo to create Project Fukushima!, an ongoing performance festival staged to support those affected by The Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster of 2011. In addition to his live performance with Marclay on November 19th, Otomo is introducing a new installation artwork entitled “Without Records,” shown exclusively at Japan Society between November 17 and November 20. A lengthy interview with Otomo Yoshihide is available online at furious.com.

Christian Marclay is one of the acknowledged inventors of turntablism, the art of creating experimental sound using nothing but pre-recorded records, multiple turntables and a mixer. Roughly concurrent with the birth of hip-hop break-beat DJ-ing pioneered by DJ Kool Herc, Marclay’s late-1970′s experiments in turntablism drew largely from the light-hearted, found-art style of the 1960′s Fluxus movement. For multiple decades, Marclay has utilized vinyl records as a creative tool to explore sound in new and exciting fashion. His recent experimental video, The Clock, won Marclay the prestigious Golden Lion for Best Artist at the 2011 Venice Biennial and caused a sensation when it was exhibited at NYC’s Paula Cooper Gallery earlier this year, leading to round-the-block lines to enter the gallery.

Over the past two decades, guitarist Alan Licht has worked with figures ranging from jazz legend Rashied Ali to alternative rock pioneer Tom Verlaine to multi-disciplinary artist Michael Snow. With Sonic Youth’s Lee Ranaldo, he founded Text of Light, an ongoing ensemble which performs freely improvised concerts alongside screenings of classic avant garde cinema. More recently he has joined forces with media artist Cory Arcangel and curator Howie Chen to form Title TK, a “banter-prone” band that has been described as a cross between David Antin and Spinal Tap. Licht was curator at the famed New York experimental music venue Tonic from 2000 until its closing in 2007, and has written extensively about the arts for the WIRE, Artforum, Modern Painters, Film Coment, Village Voice, and other publications. His book Sound Art: Beyond Music, Between Media, the first extensive survey of the genre in English, was published by Rizzoli in fall 2007; a book of interviews between Licht and musician and actor Will Oldham will be published by Faber & Faber in March 2012.

David Novak is an assistant professor of ethnomusicology at the University of Santa Barbara, California. His work deals with the globalization of popular music, media technologies, experimental culture, and social practices of listening, and has been supported by the Mellon Foundation, the Fulbright Foundation, the Social Science Research Council, and the Society of Fellows in the Humanities at Columbia University. He is the author of recent essays in Public Culture, Popular Music, and Cultural Anthropology, as well as a forthcoming book Japanoise: The Cultural Feedback of Experimental Music (Duke University Press, 2012) that traces the transnational movements of the underground genre Noise, drawing from over a decade of ethnographic fieldwork in Japan and North America. His recent research focuses on the politics of sound in urban Japan, particularly in the impact of noise regulations on political protest in homeless and migrant labor communities in South Osaka.”

Pre-Concert Talk: The Art of Noise
November 19, 5 PM
In an exploration of their artistic careers, Christian Marclay and Otomo Yoshihide are joined by musician, writer and curator Alan Licht. Together, they examine the past, present and future of non-music musical movements in Japan, America and across the globe. Moderator David Novak, Assistant Professor of Music at the University of California at Santa Barbara, will begin the discussion with a presentation on the experimental music scene in Japan.

Otomo’s Installation: without records
Thursday, November 17-Sunday, November 20
Otomo’s computer operated installation–a series of empty turntables set up to produce a variety of sounds–created as an homage to Christian Marclay and exhibited at museums and galleries throughout Japan in recent years, will be on view in Japan Society’s public space for New Yorkers to see and hear. Free and open to the public

More information over at The Japan Society.

Keep Diggin’!

FMF x The Ace Hotel NYC: Extended Stay


Photo Courtesy of Not Cot dot Com

It looks like the good people over at the Ace Hotel in NYC have appreciated the Flea Market Funk/ DJ Prestige Friday nights, as they have extended my residency until January 2012. That means that in December on Friday nights I will be holding down the decks in the lobby starting at 8pm. I’m excited for this, as the Ace is kind of like a home away from home. Good people, good music, and well, let’s not forget good food and a really classy hotel as well. So, if you’re looking for something to do on a Friday until the end of the year, I will be doing my thang over at the Ace, and there is no cover. A huge shout out to the staff and to the people that have been coming through, I appreciate the love. See you on Fridays, I’ll be the guy eating the best burger around before I star needle dropping some gems. Also, I plan on still dropping a new live mix every week until the end of the year, so stay tuned for that series of more mixes. Listen to the previous mixes here. Keep Diggin’!

Selected Cuts: The Ace Hotel Live Mix 5

I have been really into my design stuff lately, and well, my inspiration this week is drawn from Robert Brownjohn and of all things, a vitamin package. Super clean stuff, and I like the “selected” cuts label, so here goes. Always in awe of the stuff Dilla did, his lifting of a Stereolab sample for Busta Rhymes is genius, while some originals by the Los Angeles Negros, The Battered Ornaments, The Coasters, The JB’s, and Gary Wright have been sampled before, heavily and well, not so heavily. There is some Golden Age Hip Hop with Pete Rock and CL Smooth featuring Grand Puba (and using the Coasters sample) while Diamond and KRS-One meet and Da Bush Babees swing it, newer Hip Hop straight from Shaolin and Ghostface feat. Raekwon and Capadonna, some funky Reggae with Boris Gardiner, rockin’ steady with Delroy Wilson, and ecellent re-interpretation of Eddie Harris by DJ Nu-Mark, and some Rock with the Who. I mean if you can’t get down with “Emminence Front” think about it again. Shout out to Shut Skateboards vet Derek Rinaldi on that track. Always switching it up for you on these Ace mixes, it was done all live, one take, and is a good representation of what you’re gonna hear if you come out on Fridays at the Ace Hotel in NYC to hear me play.

    Selected Cuts: The Ace Hotel Live Mix 5 Track List

Stereolab – Come and Play In the Milky Night
Busta Rhymes/ Jay Dee – Show Me What You Got
Los Angeles Negros – El Rey y Yo
The Battered Ornaments – Crosswords and Safety Pins
The Coasters – Down Home Girl
Pete Rock & CL Smooth feat. Grand Puba – Skinz
Boris Gardiner feat. Leslie Butler – Funky N*gg*r
Bohannon – Run It Down Mr. DJ
Bobby Hutcherson – Montara (The Roots Remix)
The Who – Emminence Front
Gary Wright – Love Is Alive
Ghostface feat. Cappadanna – Ghetto
KRS-One – Hip Hop vs. Rap (Prestige Edit)
Da Bush Babees – Swing It (Instrumental)
The JB’s – More Peas
Eddie Harris – Bold and Black (DJ Nu-Mark Edit)
Delroy Wilson – Dancing Mood

Check out Selected Cuts: The Ace Hotel Live Mix 5 on my Mixcloud page.

Use this to download it.

Keep Diggin”!

Bobo Meets Rhettmatic: Mini Break Set

As part of their promotion for their upcoming release Cypress Junkies, percussionist Eric Bobo and DJ Rhettmatic have released the second of three mixes before the November 3rd release. Last week’s Funk Set was a scorcher, and this week’s mini break set has the duo playing off Earth, Wind, and Fire’s “Africano” and Manu Dibango’s “Funky Makossa”. These two run through both of these classics in about 11 minutes, with Bobo’s percussion lighting up like Kobe late in the third quarter while Rhettmatic is just plain nasty as usual: tight cuts and beat juggling like the Beat Junkies do. Of course this kind of stuff is always exciting to us at FMF. Like Cut Chemist pushed boundaries on his Sound of the Police single turntable mix, BMR continue to push the DJ/turntablism + live musician envelope as well. The fact that most people will not understand how this is pulled off is irrelevant, it’s the end result: it’s the groove that makes you move that is tell all. If you can’t move to this, check your pulse, you might be dead.

BMR – MINI BREAK SET
Africano – Earth Wind & Fire
Funky Makossa – Manu Dibango

Eric Bobo: Percussion (Cypress Hill)
Dj Rhettmatic: Turntables (Beat Junkies)

Short Haul: The Ace Hotel Live Mix 4

Another week is upon us and another Ace Hotel Live Mix is ready to go. This week I was in travel mode, so when constructing a mix/ cover design I went with a simple Otl Aicher design and tailored it to the mix. I was going to go with some Alan Fletcher imagery but maybe for another day. That being said, here’s what we have on the plate this week: Taking it back to ’83 and NYC with the Crash Crew, a mighty fine reworking of a Brother Jack McDuff classic by Jay Dee, sound pioneer Jean Jaques Perry and then Gangstarr who sampled it, a great remix of a record turned on to me by music genius Rick M that was made even better by Cut Chemist, some LA funky Soul with The Watts 103rd Street Rhythm Band, my favorite soundtrack master Lalo Schifrin sampled by Wall of Sound funksters The Wise Guys (what a great band and even better record label), folk husband and wife team turned into a break record via UBB, a superb Kat 45 re-working of Diana Ross, more Hip Hop from the UMC’s and one of my favorite guest records in J5 featuring Big Daddy Kane and Percee P, some Steve Arrington love, and finishing up with some funky Reggae from Lee Arab and The Brentford All Stars.

Short Haul: The Ace Hotel Live Mix 4 Track List

Crash Crew – On the Radio
Brother Jack McDuff – Oblighetto (Jay Dee Remix)
Jean Jaques Perry – E.V.A.
Gangstarr – Just To Get A Rep
Tune Yards – Gangsta (Cut Chemist Remix)
The Watts 103rd Street Rhythm Band – 65 Bars and a Taste of Soul
Lalo Schifrin – Jim On the Move
Friend and Lover – Reach Out of the Darkness
Diana Ross – Stormy (Kat 45 Record Re-Edit)
Ultramagnetic MC’s – One To Grow On
Jurassic 5 feat Big Daddy Kane and Percee P – Day at the Races
Slave – Watching you
Lee Arab – Now
Brentford All Stars – Greedy G

Check out Short Haul: The Ace Hotel Live Mix 4 on my Mixcloud page.

Download it with the Mixcloud Downloader.

Edan & Paten Locke Live from Dublin

Edan & Paten Locke // The Sugar Club from James Keating on Vimeo.

Here’s some highlights of The Mic Manipulators aka Edan & Paten Locke live from this past April in Dublin, Ireland at The Sugar Shack. Now I am not going to say that these guys can rock a mic, but peep Edan working the turntables while he raps. My dude is one bad mother f*cker, complete with the end of the show Bob Dylan style cue card, drill but using record covers. If you are not down with Edan, you’re missing one of the most talented dudes out there. Let’s not forget kazoos, DD-7′s connected to the microphone, turntable antics, flowers, and more. Props to James Keating who produced, shot, and edited this piece. Well Done. Look for Edan coming to a venue near you. Keep Diggin’!

Check out Edan’s website here.

Bobo Meets Rhettmatic: Funk Set

When percussionist/ musician Eric Bobo (Cypress Hill) and World Famous Beat Junkies DJ Rhettmatic came together on Bobo’s 2009 solo release Meeting Of The Minds, the idea for the DJ/percussion group was birthed. The rest is history. They released Bobo Meets Rhettmatic: The Mixtape to critical acclaim.

After loads of tour dates, the mixtape, and bridging the gap between Latin music and turntablism, the two have come together on another release, Cypress Junkies – a three-part mixtape series with a mini EP due November 3, 2011. With appearances by Dilated Peoples’ Rakaa Iriscience and Fitz and The Tantrum’s Noelle Scaggs, the mix features three new mixes as well as four studio tracks.

“ Both of these talented musicians take their superior talent, music knowledge and experience and go into uncharted territories combining Bobo’s percussion with the precision that is DJ Rhettmatic. Pure genius. ”

BMR kicks everything off with the “BMR Funk Set” and will release the “Mini Break Set” and the “BMR Latin Set” every following Thursday until release day. Not that live musicians and DJ collaborations are that uncommon, but BMR take it to a new level. Both of these talented musicians take their superior talent, music knowledge and experience and go into uncharted territories combining Bobo’s percussion with the precision that is DJ Rhettmatic. Pure genius. The two bring that personal feeling back to the music, a feeling of sitting in the park with your homies and your lady while you groove to the good music. Whether it’s Classic Hip Hop, Low Rider anthems, Latin Soul or dirty Funk, you had a good time. BMR brings that feeling back into the numb state of music that is 2011. They might not be the first to try live musicians with DJ’s, but they are certainly two of the best at it. Stay tuned for the next two mixes which I will be dropping each week.

Percussions: Eric Bobo (Cypress Hill)
Turntables: Dj Rhettmatic (Beat Junkies)

BMR FUNK SET:
Good Times – Chic
Square Biz – Teena Marie
Pumpin It Up – P-Funk Allstars
Brazillian Rhymes – Earth Wind & Fire
I’m Ready – Kano
Planet Rock – Afrika Bambaataa & The Soul Sonic Force

Bobo Meets Rhettmatic from Bobo Meets Rhettmatic on Vimeo.

Keep Diggin’!

Old Style: The Ace Hotel Mix 3

Another week is here, and Friday night I’ll be kicking another 6 hours plus on the turntables over at The Ace Hotel in NYC. Here is a preview of some stuff you might here in that time. The design and mix are based on a Wolves program from the early 70′s with great Northern Ireland player Derek Dugan and contains commentary from a match between Wolves v. Everton at the Molineux in 1970, updated of course for 2011, sort of. I’m a football fan, so I love to dig on some of these old style players, haircuts, uniforms, and of course the classic matches. A great inspiration.

This week I’ve got some Left Coast Hip Hop in case you missed them in Common Market and Jake One (one of my favorite producers), a newer Jill Scott track featuring Mos Def (or Yasin at the moment), some Jay Z sampled MSFB, funky stuff with James Spencer, Classic Hip Hop in Brand Nubian and Audio Two, a great Funk band who just dropped their new record, Deep Street Soul out of Australia via the UK, a Steinski remix off of the new Dennis Coffey record, Olympic Runners, Mophono aka DJ Centipede just killing “The Shuffle”, and on again back to Jamaica with classics from Horace Andy and King Tubby, The Jamaicans, and an obscure tune from Eric Barnett (apparently one of Rodigan’s fave tracks, soon to be yours). Just a short little jaunt that will lead you to the long musical journey on Friday nights. I’m keepin’ it movin’ and keepin’ it funky as always, all night long. Enjoy.

Old Style: The Ace Hotel Mix 3 Track List

Dugan Scores Old Style Intro
Common Market – Back Home (The Return)
Jill Scott feat. Mos Def – Love Rain (Head Nod Remix)
James Spencer – Take This Woman Off the Corner
Olympic Runners – Mac B Coole
Jake One – Oh Really
Audio Two – Top Billin’
Deep Street Soul – What She Said
Horace Andy – Pure Ranking (King Tubby Mix)
Jamaicans – Ba Ba Boom Time
MFSB – Something For Nothing
Mophono – The Shuffle
Mudfoot Break
Brand Nubian – Concerto in X Minor
Dennis Coffey – Ubiquitous (Steinski Mix)
Eric Barnett – The Horse
Match Outro

Download or Listen to Old Style: The Ace Hotel Mix 3 via my Mixcloud page.

Keep Diggin’!

Fill Up: The Ace Hotel Live Mix 2

Well I said I would do it and I’m sticking to my guns. I’m doing a new mix a week for the few months as I’ll be residing over at the lobby in the Ace Hotel in NYC. My second edition of a live mix to mark my new Friday NYC. This edition we nod our head to J Dilla, Reggae from Jackie Mittoo and the Paragons plus a Nirvana cover by Little Roy, funky goodness from Soul Vibrations, some library music, Jazzy Hip Hop from the DJ Cam Quartet, Morcheeba and the Biz collabo, some reissue Afro-Funk, and classics from the Beastie Boys (remixed by J-Rocc), A Tribe Called Quest, Roy Ayers and James Brown. This is a good representation of my 6 hour + sets on Friday Nights at the Ace.

That’s right I said 6 hour plus sets. So enjoy this condensed version of the night, and if you’re in New York City on a Friday in Oct. and November, be sure to stop in at the Ace and say hello, you won’t be sorry. Props to Alan over at The Soul Spectrum for introducing me to that Chakaras joint via his radio show. Keep Diggin’!

Fill Up: The Ace Hotel Live Mix 2

DJ Cam Quartet – Nebulosa
Dewolfe Music Librarie – Funky Spider
A Tribe Called Quest – Jam
Chakaras – Story
J Dilla Feat. Pharoah Monch – Love
James Brown – The Boss
Roy Ayers – Life Is Just A Moment (Part 2)
Paragons – Tide Is High
Little Roy – Come As You Are
Jurassic 5 – Contact
Morcheeba + Biz Markie – In The Hands Of Gods
Beastie Boys – Shake Your Rump (J Rocc And Truly Odd Remix)
Soul Vibrations – The Dump
El Rego Et Ses Commandos – Feeling You Got
Jackie Mittoo – Ram Jam

Big Ups with J Boogie

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Free Downloads of J Boogie’s Dubtronic Science singles, mixes, etc. here.

Check out J Boogie’s site here.

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More music from J Boogie here.

Flea Market Funk Meets the Ace Hotel in NYC Fall Edition

It’s no secret that my favorite place to DJ is the Ace Hotel here in NYC. Since spinning all 45′s for a fashion show/ pop of retail spot for Tanner Goods in the lobby and eventually opening up for Q-Tip doing the same thing in Liberty Hall, I have a soft spot for this place. After the successful month of June Fridays this year, I’ve been asked back to do the months of October and November every Friday. Tonight is a special treat, however, I’m starting the residency a week early. While getting some music together, I figured I’d throw down a live mix of some stuff that I’ll be playing this time around. It’s a good mixture of Funk, Soul, Hip Hop, Reggae and will give you a good idea of what I’ll be spinning on Friday nights. So if you’re in the NYC area, stop in the lobby, grab a drink (or some killer food from the Breslin) and listen to me spin some Tasty Beats from 8pm to 2am on Friday nights. Also, enjoy a live mix from yours truly to kick off your weekend. See you at the Ace.

DJ Prestige Ace Hotel NYC Live Mix Track List:

Nightmares on Wax – Damn
Nas – It Ain’t HArd to Tell (Taggy Matcher Mix)
D’Angelo – Chicken Grease
De La Soul – Brakes
Ernie & the Top Notes feat. Ray Whitfield – Things Could Get Better
Barry White – Playing Your Game
Dionne Warwick – You’re Gonna Need Me
Magic Shoes – Main Ingredient
Ray Camacho & the Teardrops – Si Si Puede (Lack of Afro Remix)
Dam-Funk feat. Steve Arrington – For My Homies
LL Cool J – Year of the Hip Hop
Sister Nancy – Bam Bam
Althea & Donna – Uptown Top ranking
Dennis Alcapone – Wake Up Jamaica
Quantic – Make Dub Not War

DJ Prestige spins the lobby of the Ace Hotel tonight and Fridays in October in November:

Ace Hotel
20 West 29th St. NYC
21+ NO COVER

Keep Diggin’!

Buttery Labor Day Rawness: Brooklyn Fireproof Outdoor Party

Looking for something to do this Labor Day? FMF has exactly what you’re looking for. My dude David Schrier has got another Labor Day spectacular party going on again. When I was living in Jersey I could never make these, but now that I am in BK, well I’m gonna have to get to them. These outdoor parties have been the hit of the last few Summers, and this one seems it may out do all the rest. Headlining are Large Professor and Neek the Exotic. For those of you unfamiliar, Large Pro (or Xtra P if you prefer), producer extraordinaire, member of Main Source (“Lookin’ Out the Front Door”, “Just Hangin’ Out”, etc.) was making beats for the likes of Eric. B and Rakim while y’all were in diapers. That’s just the start, how about Nas, Pete Rock, Mobb Deep? Should I go on? Neek the Exotic has been riding with the Xtra P for a minute, can I get the instrumental of this? Lord Finesse and Edan both are doing DJ sets. I’ve been seeing Edan all over NYC as of late, from the Hot Peas & Butta 3rd Year Anniversary to the NYC opening of the Tribe documentary at the Sunshine, plus this performance at Southpaw. Lord Finesse, well is Lord Finesse. If he’s DJing a set, let’s just say he’ll be Diggin’ In The Crates, knowhutimsayin’? K-Def, “one of the most wrongly slept on Hiphop producers of the 90′s” will be doing live beats and throwbacks as well. There will also be DJ sets from DJ Akalepse (one of BK’s best DJ’s IMHO, check him out in my man Eilon’s Dust and Grooves from 2010) and DJ Moss Bro. You may ask yourself, why should I go to some outdoor party when I could say, be at the beach? Let me answer it for you. You will not see this kind of talent all together in NYC outdoors in a long while. We have professors (literally) and educators of this music game teaching class, spinning records you will not hear anywhere else, while you sip cocktails and enjoy the end of the Summer party. Plus, there are exclusive vinyl giveaways from ReDef and Slice of Spice Records and clothing giveaways from Boundless NY. Think of this as a Public Service Announcement from your friendly neighborhood record slinger.

Monday
September 5th
Brooklyn Fire Proof
119 Ingraham St.
Bushwick, Brooklyn
L Train To Morgan

Starts at 1pm

RSVP here

Keep Diggin’!

Lo Down Loretta Brown aka Erykha Badu Meets Adrian Younge

Adrian Younge has been tearing it up as of late. Between the Black Dynamite Orchestra, the Soundtrack to Venice Dawn, and various other projects, he has made quite a name for himself in the music world. What else can we say about Lo Down Loretta Brown aka Erykha Badu? The artist/ producer/ actress has almost single handedly kept the Soul genre alive and fresh since Baduizm, constantly changing her game up while delivering the goods. Whether it be Soul, Jazz, Hip Hop or whatever else she wants to touch, Badu has been consistently gigging and collaborating with game changers like Common, The Roots, Zap Mama, Guru, and Roy Hargrove to name a few, add Adrian Younge to that list. This special DJ set from Badu is another in the ongoing showcase series by Wax Poetics that pairs DJ’s with Wax Poetics artists. Last month featured Afrika Bambaataa and Chico Mann. The show is free and starts at 11PM, so get there early.

As Badu adds another chapter to her book: DJing, the multi-instrumentalist/ DJ/ producer Adrian Younge will be doing his thing as well, so this pairing looks to be a really good show. This event is FREE, and you can’t beat it on a Thursday night. Here are the details:

Lo Down Loretta Brown aka Erykha Badu Meets Adrian Younge
September 1 | 11pm – 2am | Le Poisson Rouge | 158 Bleecker Street | New York, New York

Check out last month’s Wax Poetics Showcase via Skullcandy TV here.

Check out Adrian Younge in my Big Ups interview series here.

Keep Diggin’!